Epithalamion is an ode written by Edmund
Spenser as a gift to his bride, Elizabeth
Boyle, on their wedding day. The poem moves through the couples' wedding day,
from the groom's impatient hours before dawn to the late hours of night after
the husband and wife have consummated their marriage. Spenser is very
methodical in his depiction of time as it passes, both in the accurate
chronological sense and in the subjective sense of time as felt by those
waiting in anticipation or fear.
As with most classically-inspired
works, this ode begins with an invocation to the Muses to help the groom;
however, in this case they are to help him awaken his bride, not create his
poetic work. Then follows a growing procession of figures who attempt to bestir
the bride from her bed. Once the sun has risen, the bride finally awakens and
begins her procession to the bridal bower. She comes to the "temple"
(the sanctuary of the church wherein she is to be formally married to the
groom) and is wed, then a celebration ensues. Almost immediately, the groom
wants everyone to leave and the day to shorten so that he may enjoy the bliss
of his wedding night. Once the night arrives, however, the groom turns his
thoughts toward the product of their union, praying to various gods that his
new wife's womb might be fertile and give him multiple children.
Stanza 1
Summary
The groom calls upon the muses to
inspire him to properly sing the praises of his beloved bride. He claims he
will sing to himself, "as Orpheus did for his own bride." As with
most of the following stanzas, this stanza ends with the refrain "The
woods shall to me answer and my Eccho ring."
Analysis
In the tradition of classical
authors, the poet calls upon the muses to inspire him. Unlike many poets, who
called upon a single muse, Spenser here calls upon all the muses, suggesting
his subject requires the full range of mythic inspiration. The reference to
Orpheus is an allusion to that hero's luring of his bride's spirit from the
realm of the dead using his beautiful music; the groom, too, hopes to awaken
his bride from her slumber, leading her into the light of their wedding day.
Stanza 2
Summary
Before the break of day, the
groom urges the muses to head to his beloved's bower, there to awaken her.
Hymen, god of marriage, is already awake, and so too should the bride arise.
The groom urges the muses to remind his bride that this is her wedding day, an
occasion that will return her great delight for all the "paynes and
sorrowes past."
Analysis
Another classical figure, Hymen,
is invoked here, and not for the last time. If the god of marriage is ready,
and the groom is ready, then he expects his bride to make herself ready as
well. The focus is on the sanctity of the wedding day--this occasion itself
should urge the bride to come celebrate it as early as possible. Here it is the
marriage ceremony, not the bride (or the groom) which determines what is
urgent.
Stanza 3
Summary
The groom instructs the muses to
summon all the nymphs they can to accompany them to the bridal chamber. On
their way, they are to gather all the fragrant flowers they can and decorate
the path leading from the "bridal bower," where the marriage ceremony
is to take place, to the door of the bride's chambers. If they do so, she will
tread nothing but flowers on her procession from her rooms to the site of the
wedding. As they adorn her doorway with flowers, their song will awaken the
bride
Analysis
This celebration of Christian
matrimony here becomes firmly entrenched in the classical mythology of the
Greeks with the summoning of the nymphs. No more pagan image can be found than
these nature-spirits strewing the ground with various flowers to make a path of
beauty from the bride's bedchamber to the bridal bower. Although Spenser will
later develop the Protestant marriage ideals, he has chosen to greet the wedding
day morning with the spirits of ancient paganism instead.
Stanza 4
Summary
Addressing the various nymphs of
other natural locales, the groom asks that they tend to their specialties to
make the wedding day perfect. The nymphs who tend the ponds and lakes should
make sure the water is clear and unmolested by lively fish, that they may see
their own reflections in it and so best prepare themselves to be seen by the
bride. The nymphs of the mountains and woods, who keep deer safe from ravening
wolves, should exercise their skills in keeping these selfsame wolves away from
the bride this wedding day. Both groups are to be present to help decorate the
wedding site with their beauty.
Analysis
Here Spenser further develops the
nymph-summoning of Stanza 3. That he focuses on the two groups' abilities to
prevent disturbances hints that he foresaw a chance of some misfortune
attending the wedding. Whether this is conventional "wedding day
jitters" or a more politically-motivated concern over the problem of Irish
uprisings is uncertain, but the wolves mentioned would come from the
forests--the same place Irish resistance groups use to hide their movements and
strike at the occupying English with impunity.
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